Emacs ships with a lisp-mode for Common Lisp that supports basic stuff like indentation, [[sexp]] navigation and font-locking.

+

Emacs ships with a lisp-mode for Common Lisp that supports basic stuff like indentation, [[S-expression]] navigation and font-locking.

If you're doing serious Common Lisp development you should have a look at the complementary [[SLIME]], which gives you the ability to develop Lisp programs interactively. Here's a few useful Emacs Lisp code snippets

If you're doing serious Common Lisp development you should have a look at the complementary [[SLIME]], which gives you the ability to develop Lisp programs interactively. Here's a few useful Emacs Lisp code snippets

Revision as of 10:39, 28 March 2012

Emacs ships with a lisp-mode for Common Lisp that supports basic stuff like indentation, S-expression navigation and font-locking.

If you're doing serious Common Lisp development you should have a look at the complementary SLIME, which gives you the ability to develop Lisp programs interactively. Here's a few useful Emacs Lisp code snippets
for your SLIME configuration: